Newspaper Page Text
Another Good Citizen Gonb.
' .I. B. F. Hardeman, a prominent anil warmly e»-
|oul|tm fanner.
Speojal^ Topics. j ^
Srecut.
Purim Ball.—The Children of I*
rael, wherever scattered, have ever dang with
beaatlAil devotion to the easterns and traditions oT
thdr fathers; and in keeping with the usage of the
season, the llttle«ircle of that Calth la Athens, had
a.l classes, and they must tca«:h all
things the people waut to learn
must be proletarian and not e xc
v r ............... , ,. in Alliens on ’ ■■“•ewireie ui mat mnn is Athens, had
’ had for some » »« P»H-Hall. tiro-reddenro
take* pleasure in announcing to the citi-
aene of Athens and surrounding country
that he has secured the services of Mr.
A. R. Simmons, an artist of .high attain
ments. to preside over his gallery, and it
dal audit speedily assumed the form of pneumonia,
and terminated in his death. A targe concoorae
of citiaens attended bla fanerai on Wednesday.
Painful Casualty.—As Mr.
is with confidence that he assures his ; John mnl riding.to Athens from to home be-
Itainins that they can get pictures equal | |oW Watklnsruie, on Sunday last, htahone slum-
i t not superior to those heretofore made J ,,,„t ,„d fell into a ditch. In the fall Mr. Bird re
al Ilia gttllerv. Quick sales and small ! rl . jv<Kj „. V cro injury in his shoulder, and in atrug-
' — — | k .n,K t« get up the horse struck his taco with hit
shot, indicting severe contusions. Mr. Bird was
J town by Key. Mr. Kenney, where he
I medical attention at his lather’s, and was
W fee <t *iU '*'* I “>'*'»-utired to his home on Tuesday.
be math. Heateinher Ilint l,l “? P £*n M
can be made in clottd.v weaih
in sunshine. _
Ids book
profit* will Im our motto in future.
Ferrotype* reduced front #1.00 e»c.. to • indict
tin it.00. Ferrotypes handsomely finish- brought t«t
v,| in ft x 10 inch frames tor fi ,ue
, which minister, and other apeak-
... arc subject, and also for Bronchitis
«*: ’ VU v ‘rer’whs.Snd an invalnahle remedy
ZUvtJdtaS?aSr! Blood Furl tier, I decided
. ‘ VST Rename which .night mislead and pre-
j„ other lisearos lor which it is so welt
'^ nl . ,. j, cur ,«« i, e'.tujrh i» half llie lime neora-
\rv to rarr it with anv olkt-r medicine ; and doe*
'* • . | lV drvin’lt up.W h ’ removing the cause,
allaying if rltatien and heal...* the«ff«ctod parts.’*
* {„; medicine is sold b;- all first class druggists
A Whole People's Opinion.
cntb>r»c* aaahiandi
tirlr that hat bt»en fully tested f«>r twelvo Years,
wh.. cati abaurdlv incredulous aa to doubt the
'ireUence of the preparation T Plantation Bit-
i ► ra ha-* iiaammI through this teat, and la the moat
t- miUr proprietary prc|4uration on the coniine it'.
It «,»uM be hard to find an adult of either sex t»c-
tws-uti the Atlantic and Pacific, or between the ex
treme earner of Maine and the Gulf of Mexico, who
d,** not knco, front observation or experience,
that thi* renowned vegetable remedy ia tins purest
jo »n! Atoiuochie and the finest alterative and
. laiiutf remedy at prevent before the world. At
<« / -• venuee of, and cure lor, disease caused by .ma
laria. as a specific for dyspepsia, rheumatism and
ail nrrvons and hillious dlaeases, it is admitted to
u fairly pnti.ouoced tho Favorite Household Tonic
itnd .1 liemtlreqf the We. tern llemitphere.
We know that for cleaning paint, windows, china
*»>4 x!aM.»aie; f**r polishing knives, tin, iron,
Voas* *ud copper wares, anti for removing stains
in a rMe and porcelain, and rust for maebiuerv,
l.n -.h Morgan’s .Son's Sapolio is the twist thins in
Kron. .Maine to (California millions of children
are wearing SILVER TIPPED Shoot. Why not?
they are the cheapest, and never wear through at
r he toe. Try them. For sale by ali dealers.
ili fst 'Vit*» tsriiK N::vtk*t II »r*RKKF.rnR in
Iv'tru" We ka *w her. She cleans her knives, chi
na, windows, paint, oil clot 'is, tables and floor*
an 1 brightens her tin, brass aud silver wares with
Knocli Morgan’s Sou*’ ."Sapolio. Ask for it. It is a
(••iNlihini;.
Grover A: Baker Sowing .tluoliinos
at ml received and for sale—some excellent nuui-
of tbest* celebrated machines to which I
awuld call the attention of the ladies. A great
n.au t of these machines havo boon sold to persons
. ii Athens and in other counties, ami every one is
t i #rfectly satisfied.
F. II. Atkinson.
Banner Oflico.
Shaving, Shampooing, Hair
' ‘uMing, Bair and Whisker Dyeing, by the best
barbers iu the ^late, at Davis, Harris, X Sons'
nsir Dressing and Shaving Saloon, over Mando-
»die A Brother’s.
Shooting Affray.—A negro man
»m«l Ontnrille Durham was shut and severely
wnumled at his heme beyond " Rock CoUege " on
Rstaidar nl*h», by a n.trro i.amisl Wm. Cram.
i-urii..i» had a party that i.igl.l, and a dug chained
it. the yard was injured l.y wine of his KUCts.
He denounced the act severely, when adlfficulty
ensued, in which Grant shot him. Another version
is that Durham snapped a pistol at Grant several
times before Grant fired. The ball entered Dur-
ham’s body, and hs was reported dead on Sunday,
hat we learn that he will recover.
Erroneous.—The rumor that Sam
Ford, who killed George Brittain some weeks ago,
had been found murdered, is a mistake. Sam still
lives, and is preparing to make the lorty-seeond
crop on the same old plantation.
Sickness.—Tho late severe weather
has caused a Dumjsrof eassa of pneumonia in town.
Col. Wilkeraan has bad a severe attack, and is still
quite ill.
An Eloquent Address.—We in’
vlte attention to the chaste and forcible address of
James AN labett Esq., before the Alumni Society
of Mscen. It is full of sound philosophy and lofty
patriotism.
Death of a Sheriff.—We regret
to learn that Mr. W.T, Willhitc, the etheient
cherift of Jackson county, died a few days ago, from
pneumonia.
of Mr. Charles Sure, on Tuesday night. The m
her of persons en mwgue was not large, but tome of
the characters were, we learn, admirably dressed,
and personatedwlthstrikingefiectlveneas. A hand
some clerk, of the fancy dry goods persuasion, was
almost as killing as Mrs. Oates In the “ Flower
Girl of Paris," and two young ladies as "Boys of
the Period” held the mirror np to nature very
bappiiy. Other characters were worthy of note,
but wo forbear.
Good Dinner House.—It is the
concurrent verdict of all hungry travelers on the
Georgia Railroad, that Bell, at Union Point, keeps
one of the very best dinner houses in the country.
Wend vise out friends, specially those exposed to the
protracted ahstbenee of the journey irom hereto
the Point, to try Bell's dinners. They will for-
swear cold snacks forever after.
Who Has Kexo's Money ?—Mrs.
Zehenee called on ns yesterday, and stated that
Mr. Ze Knee told her that lie had a sum of money
deposited with a friend in town. 8bo hopes that
the party having it wiU bring it forward, so that
Mr. Zebcnee’s debts may be paid.
Grand Opening.—Our Enterpris
ing friend J. A. Gray opened his magnificent store
in Augusta on Tuesday. It is an immense three
story structure, with a basement snited to business
purposes. The first story is derated to re Lai. 1 trade;
the second to ladles ready-maue goods, with female
clerks; the third is the wholesale department. A
table was spread In the third story, loaded with
delicacies—solid and fluid—of which hundreds of
ladies and gentlemen partook, after looking through
the establishment, which has no equal in extent
or clegence In the State.
That Florida Excursion.—The
Bohemians who accompanied the late excursion to
Florida give glowing accounts of the *’ Land of
Flowers." Several persons went from Augusta,
Atlanta, Macon and other points. Fitch of the
Griffin Star, was along, and furnished his usual
fund of diversion for the party. They found Jack
sonville a lire city of 12,000 people, but the twlrny
air, caroling birds, perennial vcrrtnre, an 1 the
glories of the SL John’s river, afforded fruitful
themes for tongue and pen.
■jUfJw i gw*twfitfe
, they j mating I
. , ervnting inf
not exdHve; indue* loir
^ - ■ j
I'Xi &
Good for Athens.—A Merchant
in one of the counties abors Athens, who has re
cently visited Charleston, bought his stock of
schoolbooks and stationery ofMgj. Burke, at the
Athens bookstore. He say* he bought them as
low, or lower than they are sold in Charleston.
Volunteer Companies.—The old
" Clinch III Acs ” and •' Oglethorpe Infantry,” of
Augusta, are to be reorgani/I'd.
What say the survivors of the “Athens Guards”
to a revival of that favorite company.
Society Orators.—The Literary
Societies of the University elected their Com
mencement orators last Saturday. The Demos-
thenians elected W. B. Walker, of Atlanta ; the
Phi Kappas elected A. C. Calhoun, of Kewuan.
The elections were free from the acrimony that
too often attend such contests, and the selections
arc considered excellent.
Current Events.
The Massachusetts House of Kepre-
•• illative*dv.catcd Female Suffrage by 77 to ISC.
Sol. Smith Russcli’-* wife died in
Michigan h»>i week from disease of the kidneys.
Isaacs, an old New York hangman,
i* writing for the papers as " Eli Perkins.”
A crue 1 California freshet recently
drowned a thousand coons.
Council liluils is to be the Eastern
.rriutuua ut^ll.r Union Pacific Railroad.
Maine made last year 2,500 bushels of
I'eUl.d"'.
The ]H>pulation of Texas is stated
to be SIS,of which 7<V>,1*k> are native born.
Texas had 711 miles of railroad in
North Andover, Muss., woolen Mills
were burned on tho ihl. Irons over 81 <‘0,000.
The office of the Rt. Louis Democrat
ha* sold a few days ago for 3450,000.
The salaries of the United States
Ihhtrici Court Judge* have beeu raided to $5,000.
The nail makers have agreed to an
advance of 2b cents a keg.
The Georgia Radicals have decided
to call a convention of their parly un the 8th of
May.
Savannah go s §20,000 on a cotton
fiinry.
A nice young lady in Wisconsin
committed vuicidc ix-rauac *be had »art, on her
Bishop Pierce.—This revered di-
vine preached in Athens last Sabbath, to a large
congragation. In the evening he dedicated the
Oconee Street Church.
Storm-Coincidences.—An obser-
ving pluviosopher has noticed that three of the
severe snow storms of the winter here, have occur
red on the same day that similar Morins have l>ecn
reported by telegraph in England.
Dull.—The merchants are com-
plaining of dull trade. Perhaps a little printer's
ink would help.
Change.—Messrs Gap.n & Reaves
have recently purchased the fourth interest of the
Messrs Wilsons in the Athens Steam Saw Mill.
We are pleased to learn that this enterprise has
Wash-Up.—Quite a serious wash
occurred on the Augusta and Macon road, one mile
from Macon, on Monday. Trains detained a day
or two.
Personal.—We received a call on
Wednesday from R. M. Orme, Esq., who visited
Athens in the interest of the commission mer
chants cf Ssvannah. We were glad to meet him,
and much pleased also at the growing interest man
ifested iu this portion of the State by the mer
chants of that city.
A headless rooster that has been so
serviceable to the AUanta locals has been sold for
$500, and the bnyer luu sold an interval in l.im for
a like sum, with a view of exhibiting him.
The boiler of the iron works of John
F. Taylor & Co., Charleston, exploded, causing a
terrific wreck. Fortunately but one person was
killed—a youth employed about the engine. He
was whirled over and over, through the air, and
fell many yards from the site of the engiue, a man
gled aud shattered maas. Several other* were in
jured.
University of Georgia.
Remarks or lion. Janie i A. Nisbet,
Before the Macon Association of the
Alumni of the University of Geortjia,
Soldier’s Monument.—This mon-
unif nt is now nearly completed, and by the first
of May next, will l»e ready for erection. It is an
elegant work of Art, constructed after the best
models as to style and finish, and thoroughly free
from everything that would detract from its mean
ing as a memorial of the dead. Good taste has
been shown in avoiding all "ornaments or showy
embellishment*, while the characteristic features
of a Cenotaph—simplicity, ehastcncss and classic
beauty—have been admirably preserved in the
form and ornamentation of the work.
The base of the monument is granite, formed by
a series of steps, on which rests a tall marble col
umn, *o divided as to combine solidity and grace.
Flags, wreaths and military symbols adorn the up
per portions of the pedestal, while above them are
urns and flowers. Tbe names of officers and sol
diers of Clarke county, who fell in the Cenfcderato
struggle, are inscribed on the lower facades. Over
thi* section of the monument rises tbe main divis
ion of the column, with its imposing scroll-work,
containing four inscriptions, one on each side. One
of the fronts i* simply inscribed to the Confederate
We learn that the Blue Ridjje Rail- IVaJ ; tb*»*«>oa record. th« name or the Ladies’
n Memorial Association, while the third and fourth
have the following inscriptions, vis:
ville
el Company purchased the road from Rn
to too North Caroliua line, on the -dh.
A man in Indiana ha* 104 brothers-
in-law, and the politicians are urging him a* an
available man to Ixat Grant.
A motion to bring up the Supple-
mental Civil Bights Rill failed iu the House by a
vote of '.t to 78, two-thirds being required.
The Georgia Medical Convention
meets iu Convaulioii on the 10th of May, at Colum
bus.
Arrangements are on foot by which
the Central Railroad will control *ix New York
Mcaiucr* after May 1st.
Eleven thousand children recently
founi; together at a Sabbath School Festival in the
city of Brooklyn.
One huudred and fourteen Medical
students have just graduated at the Jefferson Col
lege, Philadelphia.
I’io Niao received presents worth
$5,000,000 last jr*ar. Since Grant bcanl It, it ia
rumored that Grant propoaaa to drcl.ne re-nomina
tion, with a viaw of becoming Pio'i auccoaaor.
The British House of Commons dont
baliev. In a republic much. A motion to inreatl-
K»»r tile expanse* of the Grown, accompanied by
remark* fovotiug % republic, received two vote*.
Willingham, Watson, Hunt, and oth-
♦t eminent lexicographers of the State press are eo
^«-'y criticising the English of their contcniporm-
nc*,M u» hardly find time to read their own proof-
sheets.
Mr. R.J. Richley, of Texas, and Mr.
G. Sauitiii, of New Orleans, have been selected as
^.rator* for tk.. literary soricUcaof Washington aud
f al lhc ^ celebration of the so
cieties in June.
Tho National Democratic Committee
r*r TinM * 5 ''»«-«i»« or tbe
G.urlm.ati Co-rteniio,. to ft,. lUe , im , , .
holding t£ Nat.oual Democratic Convention. The
.imewlll probably be July «b, „mi , h , ,
lioui*. ’
A negro man near Aiken, S. c., I
wm* stopping oat oftbi kitchen with a tea eupcon*
•vuled iu hi* Imauia, when be slipped and fell,
Jm-akiug the rnp, u piece of which rut through tho
nl.lumen a g*sh I w o inch. * folio, rausino |,j„
a::i> ■ lu,.r.l.u,,v.
A cation was adopted by the recent
i,|‘ .riqial Coiirentiou authorizing a Illnurre to be
i"rm -I with klx pre.-hytors who have been caunon-
i J’ly resident one year, and six parishes, ptovld-
» ig th it no existing Diocese shall [>o ao reduced os
to contain 1cm ti«u twelve pnrtahaa and twalre
ITcshytera. (i / •
l Inrris, of the Savannah News, isrun-
"‘"i 1 rarnar " To Gonwipondato." In reply to
“Slinhoa— v l)n ami t him on article on tfaa beetle,
•* *'■' *: “ Tour aaUmate of the bcaUt is not alto-
q i. -re .rrwe-. All Insocta are erected for oomo
u-cf.il purpoae. A bottle with a firM-ds** hna-
< *oa beetle can daatreMw n dozen frtntlei."
[INSCRIPTION ON THIRD S1DE.J
Truo to the Soil
That i;ave them Birth and reared them Men;
True
To the Tradition* of their Revolutionary Ancestors
of High Renown
And
Hallowed Worth ;
Alike by Distinct and by Principle,
Cherishing the Sentiments
of
Home and Country
And the Allegiance thereunto Due
As
One and Inseparable:
These Heroes
Ours in ths Unity of Blood,
Ours in the Unity of Patriotism,
Struggled for the Rights of States
As Held
By
The Fothcra of tho Republic
And
By the Father* as a Sacred Trust
Unto them, Bequeathed.
[inscription on fourth side.]
The measure of I hair years
Suddenly Completed
In
The fotal Issues of Buttle,
Reached tho consummation of Earthly Glory,
liT
Their Death,
Lost and Holiest office o-‘ Human Fidelity
Possible to Brave Men,
Attesting their sincerity.
Vindicating their honor
And
Sealing their Integrity,
They won their Title
To
Ak Immortai.itv
of
LOVE AND BEYER ENCE.
This lienutiful monument will bo between thir
ty and forty feet high. It Is tlx; work of Mr. T.
M.rk waiter of Augusta. Tbe noble women who
have toiled for several yean to i w.plish this
work, have aiw the supreme aatixfhc'iot’ of seeing
i the completion of their patient and aelf-denying
I talon; sad no words that ran he written or »po-
I '<•.1 ran express thrir praise half ao eloquently os
this Silent memorial of their" LoVSASBltKVRR-
kn< k" (»r i hr glorious Dead.
Resigned.—Mr. W. W. Thomas,
late Chief Engineer „f the North-Eastern Railroad,
„ r r l ‘“’* d ’ *" d wvepted a potiUen on tha Fort
^7“! .?*“• Mr - T,, niiiaa hit. shown marked aklll
and ability in the discharge of hto duties, and bta
resignation waa regretted by the friends of the en-
tcrj.pisc. Mr. Turner, late- Auistant, has hfmn
Heeled Chief Engineer, and Mr. Young, from Norh
Carolina, takes the place of AssUtant recently
held by Mr. Turner. They hare commenced the
work of permanently locating the line.
Pew Renting. —We are requested
to draw attention to the notice under this beading
In another column. Persons dealring to rent p.w*
for tha coming yaar will do well to attend aa Boa-
tar Monday, >r (aa the Treasurer in the meantime.
thofrJewSs rrotf.lfc^T^S
vti-ty. Ah. ves! they iiiu-t |»<r ««.._»
Jn.ys iu oquatlor, and clothe ibetu with
the prncely garments of learning: they
must hunt in all the haunts of poverty
for the grand minds, that are embedded
diamonds, lying waste and worthless,
and polish them np as tip wealth and
power of the State. Oh, philanthropists F
Oh, ye aspiring statesmen of the South!
whst a world ot power and wealth Ilea
buried in our bounds tor want of oppor
tunity 1 Touch this mads with the want*,
of knowledge, and it will flame into a
wonderful creation of light and beauty.
Oo into our rural district* and the p jr-
lieus of our towns, and mark the chil
dren of penury and ignorance. How beau
tiful many of them are, even amidst
their suironndings. Poor thing “ not*
C3k$ tm-Tefrugef'—consumers and not pn>-
ducers, because they know not how to be
nseful to the State.* Poor things: they
sre drifting along the great sea of hu
inanity, hopelrt*, atarleu, pttrpotdett, and
they drift on, into the vortex of vice
and crime, faultless, because they know
no better and no moral life-boats ate »:nt
out to save them. Alumni, you are sup
posed to be illuminated! Then strain
your utmost power to save these wretch
ed children of penury and ignorance; lift
them up out of the mire and meshes of
depravity and make them irnaments and
wealth producers to the State; teach
them the dignity of their nature, and the
immortal destiny of their souls; take
them in their nakedness, and clothe them
with the robes of knowledge; take them
and strike oft the gloomy, shackles of ig
norance, and set them up free and glor
ious in the radiant statnre of intellectual
manhood!
“ Then child of penury, thou may’ot soar above
A warbling cherub of joy and lore,
A drop on Eternity’s mighty aea,
A blossom on Life's immortal tree,
Floating, flowering ever more
1 n the blessed sight of the golden shore."
Every study that is needful to prepare
us for the business of life, that will add
to the wealth, power and renown if the
State, should lie taught in our colleges.—
And the eoclectic system is the one for
the times; training each boy for the par
ticular avocation he ia to follow. They
should make boys good artisans, mer
chants and manufacturers, as well as law
yers and doctors; they should fit and fin
ish them up like Villej and Baron Leibig,
who, by their lectures and essays, so
beautifully blend scientific and practical
agriculture, ns to make the earth teem
and blootn with crops, fruits and flowers;
they should furnish architects and engi
neers for our pnblic works, and for our
mines and minerals, as well as astrono
mers like those who not long since, at
the cape of Good Hope, with their power
ful glasses, from the abysmal depths of
space, brought to oHr earth the first rays
of light from a planet on fire, that hits
been burning for uncounted years. Now,
to do all this, the grand thing is liberal
endowments to all our seminaries of
learning; let the State rise up to the dig
nity of her position in the scale of com
mon wealths; let us all give as we may be
able, and especially those who arc bless
ed with wealth, like the late Dr. Terrell,
of Hancock, one of Georgia’s best and
wisest statesmen, use surplus moneys, not
to spoil children, but to educate arid ele
vate the people. And as the foundation
stone of all their teachings, let our semi
naries when well endowed adopt one
idea which is the parent of all that is
good, namely: the Dignity of labor.—
.The Trustees of the University have rest
ing on them the gravest responsibilities;
the demon of political strife should be
forever exorcised from their councils;
and they should nt once and lcrever
squelch political babblings at Commence
ment : the dark wing of sectarian bigotry
should never shed its pestilential blight
over their action. Let us hear from them
no more the oft repeated cry, down with
tho Ttonrunination*1 mllsgM TKw. *>-
multinational seminaries are doing much
good—they arc educating young men
who, but for them, would never lte edu
cated ; they are elevating the tone .nd
liberalizing the views of the great sects.
The female institutions of learning, in a
marked degree, are the pride anil glory
of the South, and arc annually turning
out mothers of Grncchii. So instead ef
warring on them, let the heathen prohi
bition in our State Constitution be strick
en out, anil let legislators and people
foster and cherish these valuable institu
tions. Let them be colleges and the uni
versity be a university indeed, where
every art and all the applied sciences are
taught, and then we will have a system,
planetary and effulgent. Above all
things, Trastccs of the University, be
cause you inay have aspirations, or covet
ease, never shrink from grappling with
popular prejudices and the conceits of
ignorance against your sacred trust—
Each one of you who accepts the truth is
bound by honor and duty to bear un
swerving fealty to the cause. Let each
one then regard himself as the champion
of tbe University, write and speak for it,
fight and pray for it, and in reference to
the solid mass of prejcdicc so rampant
among the ignorant and deluded, adopt
as his motto “ Cuneus run rum truditf
drive one wedge after another into the
ungodly hideous hulk, until it is riven
asunder, and through the chinks the
beautilu; light of a new dispensation
shall st~am in rich affluence.
And now. Alumni, there ore reforms
loudly called for at our “ Alma Mater,”
and we are faithless to her cause it we
shrink from demanding them of trustees
and faculty. Oar university, as well as
our colleges, are nurseries of children
rather than of men. Physical and ment
al maturity is essential to ripe scholarship
and mastering the abstruse sciences. Be
sides, it is not to be expected tbe tone
and discipline of the University can be
elevated and rounded into comely pro
portions as long as it is filled with youth
in the impetuous license of heyday blood.
Those of us who matriculated just at we
were turning into our teens know fiill
well the evils of this thing; how the se
ductions of ease and tho rollicking pleas
ures of college life relaxed our applica
tion; how the false system of college
boys’ Ethics so filled np our callow minds
as to make us move and live in a world
of dreams and phantasma: and at last,
how poorly prepared we were for the real
thing of life, ns we left the unreal realm
of college days sports and pastime; True
the parents ana guardians are t3 blame
os well as the Curators of the university.
Rkpeetaacy, and the ta>
oe of patrimonial wealth,
aspirations, poor scholarship,
Gy rite wild habiis
the iliadjHiw of cot-
.. 1 the college I toys, who,
recu nil lent inertness, rest on their
fathsx a wenhh. imsfois «i»ii jshiroU.
drunkard* and detiauchees ia after life.
Oh l trustees and educator*, who hold the
education of the I State in yoor bands,
of the South runs in the veins ot her
yeomanry—know ye not, that our great
ttton have mostly sprung from the loins
of our laboring clataes, and that atatea-
ra f* reared in the hard’
school of necessity, and not in the sen
suous, luxuriant abodes of wealth I—
Then move with majestic power to gath-
cr the sons of ou* yeomen into your
AnM *' ■»! con
centrate public sentiment, to the end that
our Legislature may endow a grand ays-
tMnthat wm lift tip Ms head monwlT
sututions as Geoijiia does among its
States. ▲ system that will embrace*
ooble University—all the colleges now
organized or that may hereafter be ore
ganized, and common schools in every
cooty, no endowed that University, Gei-
.leget and common schools may gladden
earth and Heaven with the glonous in
scription on their lintel*; “ Mw fo all.”
To such an institutional system, let the
proceeds of the sale of the land scrip be
freely given, for it tvnnld meet the views
of the Congressional grant Ami as the
system would be a popular idol and the
petted child ot the people’s lore, the
Legislature would rim to throw around it
in liberal lavish contributions, 8tate pat
ronage and State benefactions. Capital
ists would soon shower oo it legacies.—
Philanthropy endow it with sinews and
Imty fth, waff tM sons oftoH shed unc
tuous sweat and make their instruments
merry with the hum ol industry, to meet
all the requirements of its bcneficient
i requtri
Public t
Alumni: Southern civilization mutt he
perpetuated by educating our children at
home. In the pure days of Rome and in
the plenitude of her power, it was a
proud Itoast, “ I am a Roman citizen.”—
In the days of our humiliation, in all re
spects except.os to power, it is ns proud
a boast, “I am a Southern citizen.”
Southern civilization in its highest type,
is a thing of beauty. Our men*arc
brave, truthful, and full of knightly cour
tesy—our women are pure, gentle and
graceful in till the social amenities of life
—our family altars nrc sacred shrines,
and fantilvj honor the holiest of keep-
mntriage is ss bond, if not of irre-
fragihle union, at least it is but seldom
broken—and how consolitory the fact,
that never has one advocate of" free love”
tainted onr nir with her foul utterances.
Money with us is coveted as a means ot
comfort and independence, but not wor
shipped as a god; consequently as long
as our States were in onr own hands, pu
rity rolled their administrations in un
spotted livery, and history 'nears down to
future times the glorious record, corrup
tion never stained our national govern
ment as long as Southern nten ruled its
councils. George Washington, Thomas
Jefferson, Chief Justice Marshall, James
Madisan and James Monroe, laid the
foundations of this country’s greatness
with pure hands and unstained garments.
Noble, illustrious men! poor, or with
moderate competence, you went into of
fice, and poor, or with moderate contpe
tence, you gave up your places! You
left the people's money all in the treasury !
44 Such name* will be
Watchwords, until the future nhall be free.”
Let the spirit of relentless power op
press us as it may; let our unciccatrised
wounds bleed on, ns again and again
they are opened: let malice fill all the
channels of communication with our de
famation; still there stands this illustri
ous record, and, thank God ! there it will
stand, undimmed, now and-forever!
To perpetuate this type of civilization,
we must educate our children at home;
build up seminaries of learning that
Pharo-likc will send their scintillating
beams ot light over all waste places, un
til not a boy or a girl in our sunny land,
who wnnts an education, shall l>c denied
the priceless boon.. Oh! my country
men ! wc may be poor, but in this is our
riches; we may be cast down, but in this
will be our exaltation ; the winds of ad
verse fortune may sigh and sough in niol-
ancliolv dirges through our harps as they
hang upon the willows, but blessed
thought, and comforting assurance 1 in
Southern intellect, warmed nod illumina
ted by home culture, will be found the
power of a glorious resurrection! Oh !
ye budding young statesmen of the
South! be not attracted by the gilded
pomp and heartless 'parade of national
honors, but rear up high and in munifi
cent array the standards of education at
home!
Look at Prussia! when she lay bleed
ing and in despair at the feet of Napo
leon Bonaparte, her king under the in
spiration of tbe renowned Humboldt,
said to his counsellors; “ Wo must edu
cate ail our people, and Prussia will again
be great.” Lo! Prussia is again great,
aye, greatest among the great, and the
intelligence ot her people is the wand pf .Hot-bcd education is tbe rage, under the
1 _ w • ssssatalron wlna rtf nnttinrr enne anrl irsnis
work. Public opinion, too, sets so strong
in favor of such a system everywhere that
the Congress of the United States will de
light to do itself honor by magnificent
donations. Nor lit the vile pack of
demagogues, who, hyena-like, prowl
among the flesh and bones ot putntying
systems, raise their wail about the bur
dens of the dear jtttijde. No sirs 1 No!
instead of increasing, it would soon re
lieve the burdens of the people. The
diffused intelligence of such a system
would soon put wheels, powers aud di
versified industries at work, that would
immensely increase (he taxable values of
the State, and the money alone, kept at
home to educate youth at home, now ex
pended for education in otherStatcs and
countries would abundantly psy all the
expenses of such a system. And what a
metamorphosis it would bring about.—
Prosperity would spring up in our bor
ders; contentment md social pleasures
again preside alicut our hearthstones;
plenty fill our bams with abounding
Stores; the laws rule in tranquil and su
preme sovereignty; ignorance be driven
from its dismal huts, and vice and crime
from their bloody lairs, and the whole
State be belted with stones of light which,
in rippliiife wavelets;, will dance along
the sea and crown our everlasting moun
tains with imperial beauty. Faculties,
educators, trustees, philantliropists, of
Georgia, meet, consult, and co-operate,
start the movement energetically, and
tliis grandest work of statesmanship can
and will be accomplished.
And now. friend* nnd brethren, let me
hold up to your admiration tbe history
and example of the University ot Ken
tucky. John B. Bowman, a graduate of
Bacon College and native of Kentucky,
found out when he went to farming that
he was ignorant of tiie constituent prop
erties of soils; and deeply impressed with
the inferior character of the Kentuoky
seminaries, determined to establish a sys
tem worth; of that noble cot raionwe-slth.
Enlisting far life in the causo, he.»rocur-
ed i'rora the Legislature awMt' r| ly to
draw the load scrip donated b Congress
•• Csotaity fbr aj^jcuhi'Ai and me
chanical education, locat'd »«d advan
tageously sold tbe ia’? 1 ** Then he se
cured liberal appropri ations besides from
the Legiilature, ana sallied out to receive
from the prosperous people of that Com
monwealth, their libetality warmed bv his
eloquente and zeal into generous flow,
tho most munificent donations. He
bought the land and buildings on which
Transylvania University stood and . Ash
land the adjoining homestead of Henry
Ciay, mad there he located the Universi
ty of Kentucky in the cheapest living
and most beautiful region of the Unite!
States. Already it embraces six colleges,
and with between seven and eight hun
dred student* stands forth the great Uni
versity ofthe valley of the Mississippi, if
not of the United States. Pre-eminent,
however, in all its excellencies, is its Me
chanical rod Agricultural College, where
a number of young men in fields and
workshops earn, dunngtimes not devoted
to study, ample wage* to pay all the ox-
pemes of their education. Let us hold
this University and its founder up tor
Georgia’s imitation. He declares if be
lives every boy in Kentucky who wants
an education-shall have it, and it too
poor to pay anything thall have it “with
out money and without price.” Grand
Benefactor of his race John B. Bow
man’s name will be heralded along the
corridors of Time when Henry Clay’s is
thi pleasures of i-nc^TriStdshiSrS
flies with wanton libertinism from the
endearments of wife, child and sweet
heart iuto the harlotry of Caucuses anil
Campaigns. Even those who win re
nown pay for it with their peace—thev
food their ambition with nightmares and
murdered sleep, and of all men they are
the most miserable; they travel up to the
sbppery cliff of Came, through shards,
scoriae, and thorn.bushes—“the thorn
tjul pierce then, like Byron’S, ere of the
trees thoy plant” Look at Clay, Calhoun
and Webster; how these gladiators fought
on tiie amphitheatre; how they rocked
the hustings, electrified the Senate and
w. a. withers. <’
WITHERS & .TONTE8,
■‘ft
men; how they fawned upon and feted,
and fed the poor gilded flies of Courts
ud Cabinets, who afterwards, with bane
ingratitude, stung them and poisoned
with azotic gall their gnat hearts, end
finally hew these instatiate worshippers of
ambition drank deep potations from the
bitter cup of disappointment and died at
last in the honors of political mania
potu. Clay, Calhoun and Webster; they
left wo eadnriffig monuments, boennse
their grand intellects only fed their per
sonal ambition.
And now, Alumni, I conclude aa I be
gun : Southern civilization in its highest
typo must be nurtured and perpetuated
by educating onr children at home. Be
not discouraged by our depressed condi
tion. Tis true we walk among the ciu-
ders and still burning plowshares of war.
Seasons, labor systems, and far shove all,
a non-self-sustaining Agriculture, which
must and will be radically reformed, have
wasted our substance. Mechanic arts
and the diversified pnrsnits which pro
duce wealth and power are sadly neglect
ed. But be not discouraged, all these will
and most be changed. The soil fertilized
by the sacred dost of George Washing
ton, Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson
and Howell Cobb will continue to produce
a giant race. As the floral and vegetable
luxuriance which crowns the natural
world with its choicest diadems of beauty
springs from decaying substances, so from
the cerements of our old Southern system
our old Civilization will burst forth again
resplendent with the vigor and glory of
progress.
Proprietors Novelty Iron Works, Atlanta, Ga.
JUT*ANUFACTUREBS of Building Fronts, Gratings, Window
AXJ_ Laoi|iPo»t», Column/,Grate Bars, Hitching Poati, Brockata, Railroad Frees, Sat
SagorUiUc, Chain and Settles for Lasms and Verandah*, IroraBaUlngi and Faadafa of
Window Guards,
* SzaMr hotoa,
'tho latest pz*.
fowar Ki’ia. Chain and BetUaa for Latrn* and Verandah*, IrooOBaUinp i
tern* for Ouietery Lota, Fez ces and Verandah*, otc., etc. All order* for
□RON AND BRASS CASTINGS AND MACHINERY
of *J1 kinds attended to promptly, and no drama mad* fornattoms when In malar line of work.
" We also mamitac tore M Irons, Andiron*. FIro Stands, Wdl-whaota, Portable Grates, Kettles, Cadi-
dronz, ShiiteU, ate., ate. Wo are agent* for th*
Tnnite Company’s Emery Grinder*, Saw Gammei-s, Pa*
]Pl*af0% ete* wibeta we will deliver *
These whseb are free from any offensive odor, do not glaze, yum, or heat, us
some do; ora not liable to burst, and will cat further than any other wheel.
sept 30 <m
D. H. & J. T. DENNING,
DEALERS IN
WINDOW SASHES, BLINDS,
SMK<m SA!te t •
Lime, Cement, Plaster Paris, Hair,
FIRE BTalCK, JV.
COMPRISING A COMPLETE STOCK OF
Building Material,
45 Jackson Street, Near Pott Office, Augusta, Ga.
W E BRG LEAVE to soil attention to our fitdUtlw for sepplyina balldln*material, and inr'te ora
examination of onr stock and price*. Our Ifoora, Sashes, and BUnds are of White and South
ern Fine, and having connection with wnnufsrturer* uouth, can till orders with tiRunntnrss. IMsns
and eWiraztet furnished, and contract* takod for all styles of buildings. Send for* PiiccList.
jan 26. 3m. D. H. & J. T. DENNING.
Athens Retail Prices Current
FOR THE WEEK ENDING MARCH, » 1872.
Corroded Weekly by England & On.
her Empire.
Alumni 1 college edveatiou must he more
practical, extended and cheap, and this it
will be popularised. There are in the Uni
ted States two hundred and twenty-five
colleges for males which confer diplomas.
And there are 14,000 youths in these col
leges, pursuing their studies, or about one
to 30,000 ofthe population. Two remark
able things are true: first, that the ratio
of students is much smaller than it was
forty years ago; and the other is, that
self-made men arc driving University
graduates from pests of-honor more and
more all over the country. However it
hurts our pride, these things must be
confessed. The reason is, the curriculums
and education in our college* ore not suf
ficiently practical, and do not meet the
wide wants and progressive demands of
the age. Colleges were founded and uni
versities endowed in the middle ages, in
the interest of aristocratic families or
ol priestly domination. The occult sci
ences and dead languages were tongty in —*.
them i* the rigbtMid guerdon of privi- of the masses. Cooudat that the (fight
loreS nrdera^of of desisSng men. Hence, thousand dollars annually paid out of the
at pan
to work. Mistaken, aye. fatal notion—
put them to work before they are sent to
college, and then, when they matriculate,
they will be blessed with constitutions
and mental Vigor to gi*sp, with appre
ciative study, the secrets of Science and
the bcauliiul things of Art. Trustees I
Faculties! you have, it is true, as aclass, a
fine set of boys under jour management;
but to advance, the standard of scholar
ship and to turn out from your halls a
much larger nutnlter of graduates, who
will become Leviathans in all the placid,
as well as troubled waters of life, you
mutt gather into your dosses more amide,
age and maturity. Another refonb loud
ly and imperiously called for, is the ex
peases at tile university. Front six bun
dred to a thousand doflars a year, are re
quired to foot up a student’s bills—rt sum
sufficient to support a family of seven
persons' in Germany or Scotland. Con
sider that tins scale of expenses forever
seats np tbe university against the sons
Consider. tha* t
: from view in the crei
bu
ys IB
light
Cotton.—— -per. lb.
Fortorar ClOfis,—Cotton Yarn*. -S l 65
1!
4-4 “ « 14
Dry Good*..—Prints, “ io
Delaines, ” 25
Bl’ched Shirting. •• 10
Bed Ticking, “ 20
ProTlstanz.—Flour, Fancy, per bhl.. IS 00
tail; 11 «s
Superfine “ 10 00
Corn per bush. 1 10
Pee* •• 1 15
Meat “ 1 20
Wheat « 1 25
Bacon, ho^ round, per lb. ^9
“ should era, •• 9
“ clear bulk sides. 10
“ “ “ shoulders, 0
Lord, “ • IS
Irish I’otstoes, per bush 2 50
Sweet “ “ 50
Eggs, per dox. 15
Butter -....per lb. 20
Tobacco—Common “ 59
Medium - “ 75
Fine — “ 1 00
Smoking “ ao
Snuff. —•• 90
Cigars, Am per 1000 85 00
“ Aarons.... •• 75 00
Aamaltlan—Powder. per tb. «
Shot. •• 12
Lead “ «’
Caps per box, 10
Wooden Ware.—Painted Buckets, doz 3 50
Cedar •• « 12 00
SieVes, “ 3 50
LIquora.—Core Whisky,... per gal. 3 00
Peach Brandy •• '
Hoftand Gin - **
Bourbon Whiskey, «
Wines, •>
(traceries.—Sugar, Crushed per lb.
“ A "
“ B «•
“ Brown,good “
Coffee, Rio —
“ Jar* ••
' Tea, Hyocn “
“ Gunpowder, “
“ Black "
Syrup, Sorghum, per gal.
2 00
2 50
2 00
3 00
3 00
18
15
1 50
2 00
1 50
60
perils.
Cheese —_ ••
Crackers...-
to 20*4
to
to 18
to 1*54
to 15
to IS
to 35
to 30
to 40
tots 50
toll 50
to
to 1 20
to 1 25
to 12J4
to 10
to 11
to •
to 1 00
to75 00
US 00
to 45
to 4 00
tol5 00
to 4 00
to
to 3 00
to 3 00
to 8 00
to 7 00
to 7 00
to
to 16
to 75
to 1 00
to 50
15
Onions,-. P—bush.l 00
Candy, Fsney.— per to. M
“ Stick *' «-
Soda ..... “ ii
Black Pepper “ 35
Ginger “ 23
Starch- “ 15
Rice - " lo
Mackerel No. 1,— per kit, S 00
“ No. 2,... « 2 CO
Sardines, per box, 25
Soli per sack, 2 00
Wmm - e VSZ==z mt "*- i»
Madper. •• 20
Sulphur. ——
Hardware.—Droit, Swecds—
“ Country bar
to 1 50
to 60
to 4ft
^ 15
40
to VL
to 20
toll*
to
to 2 25
to SO
to 7H
to
10
per do*. 8 oo
CKO
8 to
Trace
Stafoe,
Chains,
State Treasury is taxed on all the people
to meet the currant expenaea at the uni-
lse to wonder that»
leged orders, or of designing men. Hence,
wealth or power, temporal or spiritual,
held the keys to these institutions, and .
WI OipS indj&re«o.. ifoot hartilitj
expenses confines the 6tadents to the
wealth’' clasa of society, and they are the
pampt. d, spoilt sons of fortune 'in too
were forever excluded from
shades. This state of things continues
“*l in a some-
it ifankt he
to the present day<
what modified form
changed—their dooia must be opened to
fading from view in the crepnscnl
of tradition. And betddes Bowman, how
grandful our Southern men loom up who
have devoted themselves to tha illumi
nation ot the people. Jefferson’s monu
ment is the University of Virginia. His
great party aryl its principles nrc gone,
but that institution will bless genera
tions, and ita founder is tbe benefactor pf
ages. Robert E. Lee! was he grand nt
the head ot the Army of Vitginia f Then
waahe peerless as he imbued the minds
of young men in the balls and recitation
rooms of Washington t’ollege. with thrir
duties to God ana tbeir country t What
a colossal figure Commodore Maury will
be in the Pantheon of fame: with Lis
trident he traced the currents and map
ped out for mariners the hidden dangers
of tbe sea; and now, liold explorer, be is
•bout to forecast and tabulate the crops
of the World,'even before they leave the
hands of the producers. Son of geniua,
the dopialn of mighty waters dap their
hands ovsrthy triumphs, and the univer
sal anthem of earth’s crop-crowned fields
sing thy praise.
Bat, Alumni, the tiro brightest names
on onr roll of honor am John and Joseph
LeConte—one now President and the
other Professor of Na tural History of the
University of California—native Geor
gians and graduates of onr University.
Othen of oua Alumni, by their eloquence
in tbe Congress ot the United Stales,
have won national reputation, Bnt the
reputation of the LeOonten is cosmopo
litan—thrir names are familiar to tho Sa
vons of the world—thrir productions
have gone into the linguages of all the
polished States of Europe—they unroll
the everlasting strata of earth to trace ita
history—they have wrapped the fixed
stare of science into a royal tiara around
♦hrir heads—Trurtces of the University:
It wss a sad day for Georgia when wo
lost them from her University, and, with
my distinguished friend. Judge James
Jackson, at your last annual festival at
Athena, wc hog yon Da tiring them bock.
On the contrary, now , n»y friends, rom-
pared with there illustrious examples,
how poog and uttuntWactory the record
of tbe host, who ruth into politics and
the professions, b It pot a record of
shipwrecks and failures It is, ate la.
tala of fitful fortune—some half isd and
half clothed—the of polloi doomed to
mediocrity—not a fisir drift into dissipa
tion and eariy graves bow and then,
here and there, on* wad another win the
tickle plaudits of tho crowd, but thrir
glory, like Boreal Mjlht*. shoots upln
rosente, transient pencils, soon
shrouded in obbvioiti darkness,
is no greater numberet of the ground than
thepolitician: Itfrivtiiu slarwoftlttr
rabble; be is the pendulum of popular 1
to 7 00
to 8 00
15 0S tots 00
15 00 tots CO
toe tots oo
Boots, Northern, per pr.4 00 to S 00
Shoes, “ 1 50 IQ 4 00
Iota ———— per lb. SO to SS
Upper. •» 50 to 60
Harness •• 40 to 46
Calfskin* “ 50 00 tolftft 00
Kip Skins “ 50 00 toTT. 00
-GoM, baring IN to
•• selling I 10 to
Silrer. buying— I 03 to
I “ \ •oiling.— 1 05 to ,
9
COTTON
-M ADE FROM
PiHtE BftftE ANB AMMONIA
Producing a Large Increase iu Crop of Cotton, Corn and other Cerent-
WHEELE8 & CQ., General Agents,
155 Reynolds Street, Augusta, (*a~
8. C. B0BBS, Agent, Athens and S. E. Ga.
$58 OO Casli; $68 oo Not. 1st, 1872.
r
ALSO, AGEJVT FOR THE
ECLIPSE SOLUBLE PHOSPHATE,
Made from Dissolved Bones, Sulphuric Acid and the liest Ammonincnl nin-
tonaL No inaoloble substance is used, auti surpassed by no Fertilizer in tine.
Price $55 OO per Ton, Cash; $34 per Ton* payable 1st
November, 1872.
E. P. CLAYTON & CO., Augusta, Gn., General Agents.
trJ£T?i D ?£?&? ed *t“ e an<t »parca no tneatra In getting up Agencies fi r the VERY B1;»T
,hl »“cUoii ami surrounding country, f ul
alltlragwyt tea Wrong tafaitlal trtal-l»Uering those vho tue these will be doubly paid, is I •«
determined to sell nothing, if I knw it, but the bent Fertilizers In use—taking to Urge rain In e .....
log yean. For terra., of sales, certificates and ImnOl.illn, coil un
Athens 0 next November in tuT thl * frrtUtaenat 15 cents a pound, for Middling, delivered In
. S. C. DOBBS, Agent,
jan 19-2m No. 12, Broad Street, Athens, Gn.
Special Notices.
PrematuretiMi of Eairmay be entirely present
ed by the no* of Bnro-u’s Cocoatne. It has never
railed to arrest: dees, and promote a healthy and
rigorous growl h. It Is also on on rivalled Irair dress
ing. " *
taut them MS.—U any disease deserves thq namo
of demon^e, l . | a Dyspepsia. It rack, and tears the
system liken veritable fiend, and renderaiifo a burn
den. The med Icines of the dfa
pal it. Oast It .mt with Dr. W.
ten. Thereto ao form of Indigestion that can
stud this potent tonic and alteratlre.
ho Ladle*’ Toilet complete without the fragrant
Soxodont—unto th breath sweat odora it, hMtrto.
the gums a ruby redness soon assume, the teeth ri-
valatabater tint, and mem as pearl* nt In scowl.
paid for a reread* tints win euro
rjr will’ not ex.
•r’» Vinegar' Bit-
— . with-
J0 Park
rateable solve for all purpose*. SobTiiAfXew,
rite. j.7.1arf L aStMVt.iraiK,€fr
OstaitaTtekS|al<U;« mfcet ayitttet- Itret.
recti the bad e fleets of Inferior dyes, * Bile t be blotto
or brawn tints It pradocw an Identical to nature.
Factory 68 Malden Lano.N. Y.
Onyalais tea»riteflln5dw|awl pote-
properties, dtscorered by Dr. Bigelow, pro-
of Botany, Detroit Med. Col. A perfect ono-
tsdoptals! John Fur. Chemist, N. Y.
dyne andc
The Perest tnd Kweetnt Cad Urer «I in the
orid is Hssari A CasweU’s made on the w»-.lu>re
■om fresh, .elected Urcra, by Ua*w*U, Hazard A
Co.. New York. It i. atwolutely purr slid .west.
Patients who liavo once taken it prefer it to ali
others. Physicians hare decided it ruj>criui tonny
oftke other oils in the market.
CASSIZZ2 A3)AMS,
DESIGNER,
fflQft j^piTM ud
ELEcmt.oira-x’iTsro,
S. W. t’onxKB Fornrit and Walkitt Streets
Cincinnati, Ohio. irit 1
Lock Box 226,-■
:*S Astral Oil.—Safest and Ixot lllumina’lng
Oilevcrmode. Doe* not take lire, nor es|lode If
the tamp to broken. Over 130,UO fomillet c_.o it,
and no accidents have occurred from it. oil llouio
of Chari*. Prat t established 1770, New York.
Jonvia’a laoforoos Kid (ileve I Irsitrr rivtxm
soiled (love* *, trel to new. For nie by Druggist*
and Fancy (Joed. Dealer*. Price 23 cent* per bot
tle. F. C. Wells A Cn., New York.
Klriry’*Phlht.krn 1.aa established, warranted
remedy for painful Menstruation laud equally .16-
cient a* a nerve ua antidote In all «•**.* of Xcrv. a.
excitement, stonurhudstoeplorMitr. ie male or
fomide. Sold overy where for Si a leit le. Morgan
* Rbtey, dnigjtata, N. Y., General Agent*.
A Ynnthftil Axprsranre and a beau tiiul, .-tear coni -
plcxlon la tho ces!re of everybody. Thl* effect U
produced by ua'ngG. W. Ireird'* "litooia of Youth"
a haimlem oeautifyer ofthe ihin. Will rtnootVall
diacolontion, tan, freckle, awl *iin bttro*. T1ich*c
of thltdellghtfiil toilet preparation outwit He-
.tell no Tale*, if they did, gntilietna
against the depleting lancet, the drank purge aud
the terrible stdivantoortbe materia mreuc* weulu
arise front every grave yard. Theinoilu-f Route.n
medical science la, “ Preterm end Mefsttl','' tot
divtruy, and no remedy of our day I. *o in' harmo
ny with this idea as Dr. Walker’. Vloegar liittere.
M 1 «*iAUfeH.i.kajihtiiHa
10PERTIES? A PLtASANT DRINK
J[RV0U§ 01 SFflSES LtViTP COMPLAIN 1
AHyMUtetefirH
\PE COAO FORTHE MENTAL ORCANIZAT!'
Are an an tido to to change of Water and Disk.
iiiKwmnitwiiiMinT’i’ij
to tbe
IftRLLULARITY OFTHE-B OW.EC-S
The grand Panacea for tdl the ilU of life.
TRY ONE BOT.TLE
FHISRLUS THESE,
BMSCBBE IT B
■mnl
HorwdBdM’8 Bm lelkfi.
Hof these beantlful Danish photo*
H^Hta mo«t elegant in existence-com-
[ « Spring,” " Summer,” “ Autumn,"
^«fe’m , fyVh»" * U ’ e ‘ OW
BURKE'S BOOKSTORE,
TLT AVING been the first to inrrtt-
J—L dace to the pnblic the Hubhard Squa*li,
American Tnri«n Squash. Karbleb. ad Mmitnm h
Cahlragc, Mexican Sweet Oort*, phinnev'* Wnlcr
Mehta, Brown’s N.w Drsrf Marrowtat Pea, Riston
Cnrlo.1 Lettuce, aud other
Kew& Talnablc Y egetn tol es
with tiie return ol anotltrf *eaaon I ain again pre
pared to umrU .tue public with Vegetable and
Jtewe. rwco* of the purest quality. Slv Annual
OttalneuetaneWTCMv.jo.d will be rent yr.RR to
■“"P” not only aft novcu^ i, otlho »,and»rrt
vegeUbfea of tba farm and garden, tuv.i h
4red Wtach arc of my otrn growing), and a car” .'”
tjr of Flower Scrda. •ou tiie cor^r t»f
my ellalngei w m re, tannd copies of letter,
celvadfrontCtrrearoand gardener, residing in <
onfend ,kaU reach the rnsrChster: 3d: That
reed than be Jreth iMt ffwt |« Hares. Cutahjtuea
free to all. -. JAMES J. ttToBJSGtmYr
j.t 2A-2ra Marblehead. 31a*..
New anil Rare Vegetables.
I WAKE the seed of New nnd Rare
Vegetable* a*pcclnlty, to-iddi* raising all the
common ygrietlea. tm the cover, .fntv yat.d<gtic
will l>elennd extract* fires loiters rcceitrel prom
f niter*and gardeners rasHlleg In over tldit> d't-
ferent states and territories, who have utud my
sod* front one to ten year*, ('alabnue* »ent Irci,
to all. teg. f grow over awe hundred vsriot to,—
<Jt»l your directly fnuu the Kroner.
JA.MKHJ. U. GUKtJOKV, MarhlrhKHl, >law«.
Feb. I -2m.
COOPER'S
LE&THER-SIUCK1I8 SOMELS:
. . ...... -~-n--t-.lt B2i»ri'i.-trf.-:-.i!-
The .relurin.; oinnumenU ef Frnimore Coop
er are his work*. While the love of counti y co»-
TJsLs&kx
find a piaea iii «vrry
American’s Ubnry,' f —IXhl*r Wd«Pr.
p s world
Romances:
K \ APPLETON & CO. announce
[e that tiny ^ave cnaumeorod the petdiritafr
of J.Fenlmore dooper'. Novel*, in a form designed
for general pototar circulation. TV* aerie.-wiU
hrgitt with the tamou* " Iwather-Stocking Tale*,"
five in urea>017 which win be published in the
foUewing order, at intervals of about a month:
f. : Viktor tW« MnntcJttra. » v
tH: SS tiSZXS: ?S SSfcr
ol UU rOtabto^qdttog Tsta"
to handsome octavo valttmt
ptato*. riari voU toe su per
‘ with etitf '
valimiv*. from
■k superbly and
fully Ulustratel with entirely new dedgn* by the
dlstiDguUhrd ortut r. O. C. f wrtay. and Beand In
an attractive paper.cover. Price, Seventy-Svv
Ocala per Yriume.er «s.7ifor the eereptatoraoi. i
d!^.7r ri m,raro cn v5^1*tol- ^'hTbtodtox'liS
pjcj^uii library voiumr, nr wiucn Dinuin 0 cn
wifi be Airabh(4 at a moderate price.
p-» • J.- .g3,'.'Vto'JHtare>t i y. | |'. t*t ■: -r- JO.*;:.' rt
PREMIUMS AND CLUB TERMS.
°*%nwnTw C ^re : toere»reno^ e iiokreCT
0 \'ER lDO "’AGES—printed in I v. o
colon*, on superb Tinted Piiper. I’i»i<r t: r.
drrd KuKraTliiKH nr Flowrr-. rbi.u»»nU Ve l I ts
—with description*, nnd Two Colorki* 1'i.at* m.
Direction** tnd plans for making Wjlks Livns,
harden*, fit*. The hnndrifinesi ami Boit PlrafJi *
UuiJc in the world—all fi.rTKN i ENTS, lo fi*«ri%
•wl»o think of buying aeeds—Not u«|uar ter the m.io
220,000 sold for 1071. Address
dec 1-lt Rochester, N Y.
LOOK OTTT 7
( 'IUAR SMOKERS ,;„1
V V ntera ccnenllvl 1 offer you a SUVill'ilC
t lG AH, made of the beat tobacco In market.
©nc ! Came All 1 read give tfcntt
n Trial
,>nt the National Cigar Store, College Avenue, under
tbe Newton House, Atbeus, Ga.
jat*154-m - ’ S. KALVARINSK1.
The SatniiRah Republican.
Ertablirhedin. 1«02.
8CUDDER.
u. w. acibUKu
r- j B;nn"‘T' 'T' m r ■■ i
terms: InvaffMyin Advance:
«» V eer„.....-; $io on
rrzrrr f?
tar.thsee mmklU-tastSImUj to advance.
-i liates of Advertising:
SFWtS
fHS^TaBasasws&tt.';
Inaertlon, unless otherwise contrabted?
Interest—eommorc.ai,
, _ . tod mlaceltaaeou*—thereby
triritoaea »awtdrierapeHn every rarpect. L
lateaduit’s Office.
*-*■ I and from SroVo’cl^'r.'
mpki
till 1 o r:
If.' B^UH-k. Inlend.it
ltabed, and they
of the remitULAre.
■’■♦gfiWiiaMggyre.
HARNESS MATERIAL
TpOR SALE BY
JJ CHILDS, NIC1
NICKERSON A CO,
£tRass Seed.
qlgver,
Obicharo grass,
V TIMOTHY GRASS.
BLUE GRASS,
HERDS, or RED TOP GRAS-
at the NEW DRUG STOR K.